i have the following code:
int BufSize = 60000000;
int BufSizeM1M = BufSize - 1000000;
byte[] ByteBuf = new byte[BufSizeM1M];
byte[] ByteBufVer = new byte[BufSizeM1M];
using (WinFileIO WFIO = new WinFileIO(ByteBuf))
{
WFIO.OpenForWriting(path);
Byte[] BytesInFiles = GetBytes(content);
WFIO.WriteBlocks(BytesInFiles.Length);
}
EDIT:
This is the original code i was working with, trying to modify it myself seems to fail, so i was thinking you guyz might have a look:
int BufSize = 60000000;
int BufSizeM1M = BufSize - 1000000;
byte[] ByteBuf = new byte[BufSizeM1M];
byte[] ByteBufVer = new byte[BufSizeM1M];
int[] BytesInFiles = new int[3]
using (WinFileIO WFIO = new WinFileIO(ByteBuf))
WFIO.OpenForWriting(path);
WFIO.WriteBlocks(BytesInFiles[FileLoop]);
}
FileLoop is an int between 0-3 (the code was run in a loop)
this was used for testing write speed.
how would one change it to write actual content of a string?
the WFIO dll was provided to me without instructions and i cannot seem to get it to work.
the code above is the best i could get, but it writes a file filled with spaces instead of the actual string in the content variable. help please.
I think you might be missing a step here. Once you’ve done:
Won’t you need to do something with
BytesInFiles? Currently it seems as though you are writing chunks ofBytesInFiles, which will have been initialized to contain all zeros when you created it.Edit: Would something like this help?